In Re Rohit Arora v. Zomato (P.) Ltd. (CCI Case No. 54 of 2020)

Authors

  • Nituja Singh Assistant Professor, Symbiosis Law School, Noida Campus, Symbiosis International (Deemed) University, Pune, India.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53361/dmejl.v5i01.10

Keywords:

Competition Law, Online Food Delivery Service Market, App-based Product Market, Abuse of Dominant Position, Anti-Competitive Agreement

Abstract

Competition law which is also known as ‘Anti-Trust’ law is comparatively a new set of legislation. It enables corporate laws across the globe and endeavour to protect the interest of consumers as well as small business class and traders. The Competition Act, 2002 [hereafter referred as ‘the Act’] upholds the spirit of Indian Constitution. The Constitution of India under Part IV, Article 39(c) says that the State has to make such an economic policy and principle that the process of the economic system may not yield into concentration of assets as well as means of production to the handful capitalist or industrialist causing common detriment to nation and its economy.

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Published

2024-07-10

How to Cite

Singh, N. . (2024). In Re Rohit Arora v. Zomato (P.) Ltd. (CCI Case No. 54 of 2020). DME Journal of Law, 5(01), 70–74. https://doi.org/10.53361/dmejl.v5i01.10